:In honor of Rembrandt's 400th birthday this year, the Hood Museum
of Art at Dartmouth College joins the ranks of museums worldwide
to celebrate the master printmaker through exhibitions and
programs. The Hood presents "Rembrandt: Master of Light and
Shadow; Etchings from the Collection of the Hood Museum of Art"
on view through September 17.
The exhibition features 36 etchings and drypoints by the most
inventive and original printmaker of all time. Rembrandt thought
about printmaking in new ways, offering the viewer not only
carefully finished masterpieces but also more roughly sketched
works that reveal his artistic processes.
Throughout his career, Rembrandt continued to devise solutions to
the problem of depicting light and shadow with the printed line.
The Hood Museum of Art's collection of Rembrandt etchings spans
his life's work, providing an overview of 30 years of his
evolving ideas about printmaking.
Some of the exhibition highlights include "An Elderly Woman
(Rembrandt's mother, Head and Bust)," 1628, an etching and
drypoint on laid paper; "Self-Portrait in a Fur Cap: Bust," 1630,
and "The Windmill," 1641, both etchings on laid paper; and
"Christ Crucified Between the Two Thieves: The Three Crosses,"
1653-1660, drypoint on laid paper.
In conjunction with the exhibition, a public symposium will take
place on April 22 and a special lecture by world-renowned author
and art historian Simon Schama will be given on April 26.
"Celebrating Rembrandt," a one-day symposium, will take place
April 22 from 9 am to 4 pm in the Arthur M. Loew Auditorium.
Participants will address a broad range of topics reflecting both
the diversity of Rembrandt's subjects and the richness and
complexity of his cultural milieu.
Participants will include Clifford S. Ackley, the Ruth and Carl
Shapiro Curator of Prints and Drawings at the Museum of Fine
Arts, Boston; Stephanie S. Dickey, associate professor of art
history at the Herron School of Art, Indiana University-Purdue
University; Susan Donahue Kuretsky, the Sarah Gibson Blanding
Professor of Art at Vassar College; Shelley Perlove, professor of
art history at the University of Michigan-Dearborn; Arthur K.
Wheelock Jr., curator of Northern Baroque painting at the
National Gallery of Art; and Michael Zell, associate professor of
art history at Boston University.
Celebrating Rembrandt is organized by Professor Joy Kenseth,
Dartmouth College, with support from the Hood Museum of Art, the
Fannie and Alan Leslie Center for the Humanities, and the
Department of Art History.
A related lecture, "Not Going Gentle: Rembrandt And The Roughness
Of Age" will be Wednesday, April 26, at 5:30 pm, in the Loew
auditorium. Simon Schama, professor of history and art history at
Columbia University, will give the lecture.
On July 15, Rembrandt's official birthday, the Hood will
celebrate Rembrandt with a public birthday bash.
The exhibition is organized thematically to focus on his
wide-ranging intellectual curiosity, reflected in his passion for
portraits, landscapes, biblical stories, and mythological and
allegorical scenes. A special niche will feature a copper etching
plate and prints at various stages to illustrate the etching
process. Complimentary brochures authored by Dr Stacey Sell of
the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., and Dartmouth
Class of 1985, will be available in the galleries.
For more information, www.hoodmuseum.dartmouth.edu or
603-646-2808.